"This Sunday we host our last Organic Body Play - our 5-Rhythms break of the year 2018.
We will dance the rhythms of the year 2018 - acknowledge the flow, the staccato, the chaos, the lyrical and the stillness of 2018 - maybe some we found, maybe somewhere we drowned, maybe some we are still looking, maybe some we failed to understand - whatever it maybe, it is time to acknowledge, give thanks and let the year go.
What showed up - showed up!
I need to pause, see it, recognise it, acknowledge it and offer my gratitude for it.
I am still here - standing - alive - breathing - kicking - maybe a little bruised - maybe a little victorious - maybe a little numbed - maybe a little bummed - maybe a little stunned - maybe a little found - I am here - now.
Come and Dance the final FAREWELL to 2018 with me!
I am ready to be turned over!
Are you??"
- Rekha Kurup
ORGANIC BODY PLAY - A 5Rhythms™ Exploration
A community co-created safe space that will support you to explore the vastness and depth of your consciousness through body movement.
Sun / 23 Dec
6:30pm - 8:30pm
Rs 500
Write to us, or register on our website (link in bio) or on instamojo, insider or eventshigh
+18
.
📷 / @djillu70
.
#organic#organicbodyplay#movement#bodyandmind#fiveelements#earth#fire#wind#water#space#energy#sundaysatshoonya#shoonyaspace#somatic#somaticpractice#nammabengaluru#5rhythms#fiverhythms#gabrielleroth#movement#exploration#safespace#sunday#healing

Two members of the scientific team collect modern dripwater samples, which will be analyzed for chemistry, and used to help interpret the records of the past. In April 2018, I joined a team of scientists working in Gunung Mulu National Park, on the Malaysian island of Borneo. The team, led by Dr. Nele Meckler from the University of Bergen, Norway are working to improve our understanding of tropical climate change over the last 500,000 years. Over the next two weeks I will share pictures from this amazing assignment. For more information about the scientists work, check out @MuluClimateScience @geomagazin #cavescience#science#geology#climate#rainforest#womeninscience#womeninSTEM#exploration#MuluNationalPark#climatechange#research#Sarawak#Malaysia

The EAST reactor was able to heat
hydrogen to temperatures exceeding 100 million degrees
Celsius.
Nuclear fusion could someday provide the planet with a
virtually limitless supply of clean energy.
Still, scientists have many other obstacles to pass before fusion
technology becomes a viable energy source.
Scientists in China have reported a major breakthrough in the
quest for nuclear fusion technology, which would harness
power through the same processes that occur within stars.
Atthe Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak
(EAST) reactor in Hefei, China, researchers managed to heat
hydrogen within the'artificial sun' to a temperature of more
than 100 million degrees Celsius, or 212 million degrees
Fahrenheit, at which point it becomes plasma. The
temperatures inside the EAST are actually about seven times
hotter than the centre of the sun, where the added pressure
from gravity allows for fusion to occur.
On Earth, extreme temperatures are necessary to produce
nuclear fusion, which occurs when two nuclei come together
to forma heavier nucleus. The fusion process releases vast
amounts of heat and energy, the results of which we can see
when we look up at the Sun or any star in the night sky.
#artificialsun#100million#kelvin#212million#fahrenheit#china#scientists#cleanenergy#nuclearfusion#earth#tokamak#magneticfields telectromagnetism #physics#sci#astronomy#astrophysics#cosmos#aquantummechanics#exploration interstellar #paralleluniverse#instafacts